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Dental Health

Nov. 8, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Medical Terminology - When Size Matters

Diseases can often change the size of various body parts. Perhaps saying "cardiomegaly" is more precise or efficient than saying "the heart is big," but it's also much harder for the non-medical person to understand. Knowing a few suffixes, prefixes and specific terms can go a long way toward helping you understand what your doctor is saying.

This Week In Children's Health News

17,000 Kids Hurt on School Bus Each Year

CHICAGO (AP) -- New national data show school bus-related accidents send 17,000 U.S. children to emergency rooms each year, more than double the number in previous estimates that only included crashes.

Meningitis Shots Urged for Preteens

ATLANTA (AP) -- A meningitis vaccine shortage is over, and federal health officials are again recommending the shot for preteens as well as college and high school students.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Nov. 8, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Medical Terminology - When Size Matters

Diseases can often change the size of various body parts. Perhaps saying "cardiomegaly" is more precise or efficient than saying "the heart is big," but it's also much harder for the non-medical person to understand. Knowing a few suffixes, prefixes and specific terms can go a long way toward helping you understand what your doctor is saying.

This Week In Children's Health News

17,000 Kids Hurt on School Bus Each Year

CHICAGO (AP) -- New national data show school bus-related accidents send 17,000 U.S. children to emergency rooms each year, more than double the number in previous estimates that only included crashes.

Meningitis Shots Urged for Preteens

ATLANTA (AP) -- A meningitis vaccine shortage is over, and federal health officials are again recommending the shot for preteens as well as college and high school students.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Nov. 29, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Become an Optimist -- Live Longer

Genes and health behaviors contribute to the length and quality of your life, but so do your attitude and beliefs about aging.

This Week In Children's Health News

Laws Prohibit Smoking Around Children

(USA TODAY) -- Anti-tobacco forces are opening a new front in the war against smoking by banning it in private places such as homes and cars when children are present.

FDA Questions Celebrex for Kids' Arthritis

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pfizer Inc. may fall short in convincing federal regulators that its painkiller Celebrex should receive expanded approval to treat children with a devastating form of arthritis, according to documents released Tuesday.

More Parents Taking Kids' DNA Samples

MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Many parents across the country are swabbing the inside of their children's mouths to get a DNA sample just in case they need it if the youngster is kidnapped, runs away or suffers a terrible accident.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Nov. 29, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Become an Optimist -- Live Longer

Genes and health behaviors contribute to the length and quality of your life, but so do your attitude and beliefs about aging.

This Week In Children's Health News

Laws Prohibit Smoking Around Children

(USA TODAY) -- Anti-tobacco forces are opening a new front in the war against smoking by banning it in private places such as homes and cars when children are present.

FDA Questions Celebrex for Kids' Arthritis

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pfizer Inc. may fall short in convincing federal regulators that its painkiller Celebrex should receive expanded approval to treat children with a devastating form of arthritis, according to documents released Tuesday.

More Parents Taking Kids' DNA Samples

MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Many parents across the country are swabbing the inside of their children's mouths to get a DNA sample just in case they need it if the youngster is kidnapped, runs away or suffers a terrible accident.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Dec. 6, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Enjoy Guilt-Free Holiday Eating

Life during the holiday season can be filled with endless temptations. If you're like many people who are trying to watch what they eat, you may find it difficult to make wise food choices at the buffet table. Knowing what type of social eater you are and following a few tailor-made party tips will insure that you don't walk away stuffed with guilt.

This Week In Children's Health News

Energy Gap Factors Into Child Obesity

(USA Today) -- Many children are gaining too much weight because they are overeating or under-exercising by about 110 to 165 calories a day, a study reports today in the journal Pediatrics.

Guidelines for Child Sedation Updated

CHICAGO - Doctors and dentists who sedate young patients need to monitor them closely for problems and have the tools and training to act quickly in case of emergency, according to updated guidelines issued Monday.

N.H. to Offer Girls Free Cancer Vaccine

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- New Hampshire announced plans Wednesday to become the first state to offer the new cervical-cancer vaccine free to all girls. Beginning in January, the vaccine against the human papilloma virus, or HPV, will be provided to girls ages 11 through 18 as part of a state program that offers various immunizations to children at no cost.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Dec. 6, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Enjoy Guilt-Free Holiday Eating

Life during the holiday season can be filled with endless temptations. If you're like many people who are trying to watch what they eat, you may find it difficult to make wise food choices at the buffet table. Knowing what type of social eater you are and following a few tailor-made party tips will insure that you don't walk away stuffed with guilt.

This Week In Children's Health News

Energy Gap Factors Into Child Obesity

(USA Today) -- Many children are gaining too much weight because they are overeating or under-exercising by about 110 to 165 calories a day, a study reports today in the journal Pediatrics.

Guidelines for Child Sedation Updated

CHICAGO - Doctors and dentists who sedate young patients need to monitor them closely for problems and have the tools and training to act quickly in case of emergency, according to updated guidelines issued Monday.

N.H. to Offer Girls Free Cancer Vaccine

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- New Hampshire announced plans Wednesday to become the first state to offer the new cervical-cancer vaccine free to all girls. Beginning in January, the vaccine against the human papilloma virus, or HPV, will be provided to girls ages 11 through 18 as part of a state program that offers various immunizations to children at no cost.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Dec. 13, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

How Diseases Come and Go

You might not think of a disease as something that comes and goes. But it does happen, especially when a condition is poorly understood and has many vague symptoms. Read on to find out how diseases can get "demoted."

This Week In Children's Health News

Parents, Docs: Wait Out Ear Infections

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- More than ever, many parents and doctors these days are taking a "watchful waiting" approach with children older than 2 who have ear infections, the most common childhood illness. Many are foregoing antibiotics because of worries about drug resistance and evidence that most ear infections will heal on their own.

Signs of Child Ear Infection

(The Associated Press) -- Most ear infections of children over 2 will clear up on their own, experts say.

Feds to Update Labels of Antidepressants

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Mental health experts are worried that additional warnings about the risk of suicides linked to antidepressants could curtail their use and ultimately do more harm than good.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukah, Happy Kwanzaa, Happy Holidays

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Dec. 13, 2006

How do you use the Internet? Take a survey.

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

How Diseases Come and Go

You might not think of a disease as something that comes and goes. But it does happen, especially when a condition is poorly understood and has many vague symptoms. Read on to find out how diseases can get "demoted."

This Week In Children's Health News

Parents, Docs: Wait Out Ear Infections

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- More than ever, many parents and doctors these days are taking a "watchful waiting" approach with children older than 2 who have ear infections, the most common childhood illness. Many are foregoing antibiotics because of worries about drug resistance and evidence that most ear infections will heal on their own.

Signs of Child Ear Infection

(The Associated Press) -- Most ear infections of children over 2 will clear up on their own, experts say.

Feds to Update Labels of Antidepressants

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Mental health experts are worried that additional warnings about the risk of suicides linked to antidepressants could curtail their use and ultimately do more harm than good.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2006. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 3, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Update From the Medical Journals: December 2006

What's the latest news in the medical journals this month? Find out what your doctor is reading.

This Week In Children's Health News

Researcher Studies Meth Exposure on Kids

MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) -- A University of Montana researcher is exposing laboratory mice to methamphetamine smoke to try to determine the long-term effect of the illegal drug on children who live in houses where meth is manufactured and used.

Study Reveals Guide to Deter Homesickness

DETROIT (AP) -- Janise Stone spent her first semester in college dreaming of home -- literally.

Reading Diet Articles Could Be Unhealthy

CHICAGO (AP) -- Magazine headlines entice teenage girls with promises: "Get the body you want" and "Hit your dream weight now!" But a new study suggests reading articles about diet and weight loss could have unhealthy consequences later.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 3, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Update From the Medical Journals: December 2006

What's the latest news in the medical journals this month? Find out what your doctor is reading.

This Week In Children's Health News

Researcher Studies Meth Exposure on Kids

MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) -- A University of Montana researcher is exposing laboratory mice to methamphetamine smoke to try to determine the long-term effect of the illegal drug on children who live in houses where meth is manufactured and used.

Study Reveals Guide to Deter Homesickness

DETROIT (AP) -- Janise Stone spent her first semester in college dreaming of home -- literally.

Reading Diet Articles Could Be Unhealthy

CHICAGO (AP) -- Magazine headlines entice teenage girls with promises: "Get the body you want" and "Hit your dream weight now!" But a new study suggests reading articles about diet and weight loss could have unhealthy consequences later.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 10, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

To Treat Depression, Take Action

The results of a new study show that, with the right kind of coaching, encouragement and education, action may be a pretty effective treatment for depression.

This Week In Children's Health News

Kids at Home Could Mean Higher-Fat Diet

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Adults living with children tend to eat more fat than grown-ups in kid-free homes, consuming as much saturated fat each week as found in an individual-size pizza, a new study suggests.

Study: Tween Girls at Risk for Fatness

WASHINGTON (AP) -- As if being a tween is not hard enough, scientists now call the years between 9 and 12 a time when girls are especially at risk of getting fat.

Survey Studies Teen Social Networking

(The Associated Press) -- A new survey from the Pew Internet and American Life Project provides some of the first independent numbers on social networking for 12- to 17-year-olds -- and found that older girls, in particular, are the most likely to have used social networking sites, such as MySpace or Facebook.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 10, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

To Treat Depression, Take Action

The results of a new study show that, with the right kind of coaching, encouragement and education, action may be a pretty effective treatment for depression.

This Week In Children's Health News

Kids at Home Could Mean Higher-Fat Diet

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Adults living with children tend to eat more fat than grown-ups in kid-free homes, consuming as much saturated fat each week as found in an individual-size pizza, a new study suggests.

Study: Tween Girls at Risk for Fatness

WASHINGTON (AP) -- As if being a tween is not hard enough, scientists now call the years between 9 and 12 a time when girls are especially at risk of getting fat.

Survey Studies Teen Social Networking

(The Associated Press) -- A new survey from the Pew Internet and American Life Project provides some of the first independent numbers on social networking for 12- to 17-year-olds -- and found that older girls, in particular, are the most likely to have used social networking sites, such as MySpace or Facebook.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 17, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Autism -- Act Early To Make a Difference

Autism, a developmental disorder of the brain, is so poorly understood, most people don't know the signs. So, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have launched the Act Early Campaign that teaches parents and caregivers the early signs of autism so they can get children help as early as possible.

This Week In Children's Health News

Ear Tubes Not Needed to Promote Learning

BOSTON (AP) -- Most toddlers with frequent ear infections don't need ear tubes to preserve normal learning and behavior through primary school, according to a study challenging one big reason for these common procedures.

Cold Medicine Risky for Babies, Toddlers

ATLANTA (AP) -- More than 1,500 toddlers and babies wound up in emergency rooms over a two-year period and three died because of bad reactions to cold or cough medicine, federal health officials reported Thursday.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 17, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Autism -- Act Early To Make a Difference

Autism, a developmental disorder of the brain, is so poorly understood, most people don't know the signs. So, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have launched the Act Early Campaign that teaches parents and caregivers the early signs of autism so they can get children help as early as possible.

This Week In Children's Health News

Ear Tubes Not Needed to Promote Learning

BOSTON (AP) -- Most toddlers with frequent ear infections don't need ear tubes to preserve normal learning and behavior through primary school, according to a study challenging one big reason for these common procedures.

Cold Medicine Risky for Babies, Toddlers

ATLANTA (AP) -- More than 1,500 toddlers and babies wound up in emergency rooms over a two-year period and three died because of bad reactions to cold or cough medicine, federal health officials reported Thursday.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

General Comments And Questions

Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

Unsubscribe

Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

InteliHealth Home

HMS

Commentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 17, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Autism -- Act Early To Make a Difference

Autism, a developmental disorder of the brain, is so poorly understood, most people don't know the signs. So, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have launched the Act Early Campaign that teaches parents and caregivers the early signs of autism so they can get children help as early as possible.

This Week In Children's Health News

Ear Tubes Not Needed to Promote Learning

BOSTON (AP) -- Most toddlers with frequent ear infections don't need ear tubes to preserve normal learning and behavior through primary school, according to a study challenging one big reason for these common procedures.

Cold Medicine Risky for Babies, Toddlers

ATLANTA (AP) -- More than 1,500 toddlers and babies wound up in emergency rooms over a two-year period and three died because of bad reactions to cold or cough medicine, federal health officials reported Thursday.

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Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

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Dental Health

Jan. 17, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

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Health A To Z

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The Infant Year

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Features

Autism -- Act Early To Make a Difference

Autism, a developmental disorder of the brain, is so poorly understood, most people don't know the signs. So, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have launched the Act Early Campaign that teaches parents and caregivers the early signs of autism so they can get children help as early as possible.

This Week In Children's Health News

Ear Tubes Not Needed to Promote Learning

BOSTON (AP) -- Most toddlers with frequent ear infections don't need ear tubes to preserve normal learning and behavior through primary school, according to a study challenging one big reason for these common procedures.

Cold Medicine Risky for Babies, Toddlers

ATLANTA (AP) -- More than 1,500 toddlers and babies wound up in emergency rooms over a two-year period and three died because of bad reactions to cold or cough medicine, federal health officials reported Thursday.

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Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Jan. 24, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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Health A To Z

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The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

The Truth About Altruism

Altruism isn't necessarily linked to tenderness. Instead it appears to be based on a need to punish those who act only in their own self-interests.

This Week In Children's Health News

Study: H.S. Football Players Overweight

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -- Heavy tackles and 300-pound nose guards are common in pro and college football. Now a study shows the trend toward beefier, overweight linemen is emerging at the high school level.

Measles Deaths Drop by 60 Percent

LONDON (AP) -- Global measles deaths have dropped by 60 percent, health authorities announced in a report Friday, and one senior official called it a "historic victory" for public health.

Reports Tally Birth Defects High Cost

ATLANTA (AP) -- Birth defects lead to more than 2.5 billion dollars a year in hospital costs alone, according to the first national studies to estimate their financial burden on U.S. families.

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Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Jan. 24, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

The Truth About Altruism

Altruism isn't necessarily linked to tenderness. Instead it appears to be based on a need to punish those who act only in their own self-interests.

This Week In Children's Health News

Study: H.S. Football Players Overweight

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -- Heavy tackles and 300-pound nose guards are common in pro and college football. Now a study shows the trend toward beefier, overweight linemen is emerging at the high school level.

Measles Deaths Drop by 60 Percent

LONDON (AP) -- Global measles deaths have dropped by 60 percent, health authorities announced in a report Friday, and one senior official called it a "historic victory" for public health.

Reports Tally Birth Defects High Cost

ATLANTA (AP) -- Birth defects lead to more than 2.5 billion dollars a year in hospital costs alone, according to the first national studies to estimate their financial burden on U.S. families.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Jan. 31, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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The Infant Year

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Features

Update From the Medical Journals: January 2007

What's the latest news in the medical journals this month? Find out what your doctor is reading.

This Week In Children's Health News

Yoga Stretches Into Public Schools

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- More than 100 schools in 26 states have adopted "Yoga Ed." program and more than 300 physical education instructors have been trained in it. Countless other public and private schools from California to Massachusetts are teaching yoga.

Federal Advisers Endorse 5-In-1 Vaccine

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A five-in-one vaccine that could reduce the number of jabs children receive is both safe and effective, federal health advisers said Thursday.

Proximity to Freeways Can Harm Children, Study Shows

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (The New York Times News Service) -- Growing up near a freeway stunts a child's breathing capacity for a lifetime, significantly increasing the risk of serious lung and heart diseases later in life, according to researchers who monitored thousands of Southern California children for up to eight years.

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Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Jan. 31, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Update From the Medical Journals: January 2007

What's the latest news in the medical journals this month? Find out what your doctor is reading.

This Week In Children's Health News

Yoga Stretches Into Public Schools

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- More than 100 schools in 26 states have adopted "Yoga Ed." program and more than 300 physical education instructors have been trained in it. Countless other public and private schools from California to Massachusetts are teaching yoga.

Federal Advisers Endorse 5-In-1 Vaccine

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A five-in-one vaccine that could reduce the number of jabs children receive is both safe and effective, federal health advisers said Thursday.

Proximity to Freeways Can Harm Children, Study Shows

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (The New York Times News Service) -- Growing up near a freeway stunts a child's breathing capacity for a lifetime, significantly increasing the risk of serious lung and heart diseases later in life, according to researchers who monitored thousands of Southern California children for up to eight years.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

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Update Your Profile

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Feb. 15, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

The Hair-Raising Myth About Shaving

Is it true that shaving makes your beard grow faster? Is it true that girls should delay shaving their legs as well? Actually, shaving does not make hair grow back faster, thicker or darker. Learn more about this myth.

This Week In Children's Health News

Lawmakers Refocus Kids Insurance Program

WASHINGTON (AP) -- With the government's blessing, more than a dozen states secured health insurance coverage for adults under a program designed to help poor children. Now, there is not enough money to cover the kids.

Medicaid Cuts Could Affect Students

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democrats have made it clear: They don't support recommendations from President Bush that would shave an estimated 77 billion dollars from government health programs for seniors and the poor.

Fertility Treatment Raises Defect Risk

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Babies conceived through fertility treatments have higher rates of birth defects, but the overall risk is so small that it should not keep couples from having children this way, doctors are reporting.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Feb. 15, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

The Hair-Raising Myth About Shaving

Is it true that shaving makes your beard grow faster? Is it true that girls should delay shaving their legs as well? Actually, shaving does not make hair grow back faster, thicker or darker. Learn more about this myth.

This Week In Children's Health News

Lawmakers Refocus Kids Insurance Program

WASHINGTON (AP) -- With the government's blessing, more than a dozen states secured health insurance coverage for adults under a program designed to help poor children. Now, there is not enough money to cover the kids.

Medicaid Cuts Could Affect Students

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democrats have made it clear: They don't support recommendations from President Bush that would shave an estimated 77 billion dollars from government health programs for seniors and the poor.

Fertility Treatment Raises Defect Risk

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Babies conceived through fertility treatments have higher rates of birth defects, but the overall risk is so small that it should not keep couples from having children this way, doctors are reporting.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

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Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Feb. 15, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

The Hair-Raising Myth About Shaving

Is it true that shaving makes your beard grow faster? Is it true that girls should delay shaving their legs as well? Actually, shaving does not make hair grow back faster, thicker or darker. Learn more about this myth.

This Week In Children's Health News

Lawmakers Refocus Kids Insurance Program

WASHINGTON (AP) -- With the government's blessing, more than a dozen states secured health insurance coverage for adults under a program designed to help poor children. Now, there is not enough money to cover the kids.

Medicaid Cuts Could Affect Students

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democrats have made it clear: They don't support recommendations from President Bush that would shave an estimated 77 billion dollars from government health programs for seniors and the poor.

Fertility Treatment Raises Defect Risk

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Babies conceived through fertility treatments have higher rates of birth defects, but the overall risk is so small that it should not keep couples from having children this way, doctors are reporting.

Subscribe ToOther HealthE-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

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Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

InteliHealth Home

HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

Feb. 15, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

The Hair-Raising Myth About Shaving

Is it true that shaving makes your beard grow faster? Is it true that girls should delay shaving their legs as well? Actually, shaving does not make hair grow back faster, thicker or darker. Learn more about this myth.

This Week In Children's Health News

Lawmakers Refocus Kids Insurance Program

WASHINGTON (AP) -- With the government's blessing, more than a dozen states secured health insurance coverage for adults under a program designed to help poor children. Now, there is not enough money to cover the kids.

Medicaid Cuts Could Affect Students

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democrats have made it clear: They don't support recommendations from President Bush that would shave an estimated 77 billion dollars from government health programs for seniors and the poor.

Fertility Treatment Raises Defect Risk

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Babies conceived through fertility treatments have higher rates of birth defects, but the overall risk is so small that it should not keep couples from having children this way, doctors are reporting.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

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Technical Problems

Update Your Profile

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Feb. 28, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

A Scorecard on Supplements

Supplements have become wildly popular. Randomized clinical trials have opened our eyes to what supplements can and can't do. Unfortunately, most of what we see is discouraging. Here's a quick scorecard on popular supplements as of 2007.

This Week In Children's Health News

Britain Lets Mother Keep Obese Son

LONDON (AP) -- A mother who feared she might lose custody of her obese 8-year-old son unless he lost weight was allowed to keep the boy after striking a deal Tuesday with social workers to safeguard his welfare.

Bush Avoids Talk About Child Health Care

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush encouraged governors Monday to support his call for changing the tax code to help more people buy private health care insurance, but did not address their pleas to increase funding for a health care program that insures millions of children of the working poor.

Texas Governor Defends Vaccine Order

HOUSTON (AP) -- Gov. Rick on Thursday angrily defended his relationship with Merck and Co. and his executive order requiring that schoolgirls receive the drugmaker's vaccine against the sexually transmitted cervical-cancer virus.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Feb. 28, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

A Scorecard on Supplements

Supplements have become wildly popular. Randomized clinical trials have opened our eyes to what supplements can and can't do. Unfortunately, most of what we see is discouraging. Here's a quick scorecard on popular supplements as of 2007.

This Week In Children's Health News

Britain Lets Mother Keep Obese Son

LONDON (AP) -- A mother who feared she might lose custody of her obese 8-year-old son unless he lost weight was allowed to keep the boy after striking a deal Tuesday with social workers to safeguard his welfare.

Bush Avoids Talk About Child Health Care

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush encouraged governors Monday to support his call for changing the tax code to help more people buy private health care insurance, but did not address their pleas to increase funding for a health care program that insures millions of children of the working poor.

Texas Governor Defends Vaccine Order

HOUSTON (AP) -- Gov. Rick on Thursday angrily defended his relationship with Merck and Co. and his executive order requiring that schoolgirls receive the drugmaker's vaccine against the sexually transmitted cervical-cancer virus.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Feb. 21, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Hair Pulling -- Is It Taken Too Lightly?

Hair pulling, called trichotillomania, is not widely recognized, either by the public or by mental health professionals. People with trichotillomania can't resist pulling the hair from their scalp, eyebrows, eyelashes or pubic area, which can leave noticeable bald spots.

This Week In Children's Health News

Parents Bank Kids' Umbilical Cord Blood

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Flyers in upscale doctors' offices portray it as the hot new baby-shower gift: a registry where friends and family chip in almost 2,000 dollars to start privately banking a newborn's umbilical cord blood, just in case of future illness.

How Gov't Decided Lunch Box Lead Levels

(The Associated Press) -- In 2005, when government scientists tested 60 soft, vinyl lunch boxes, they found that one in five contained amounts of lead that medical experts consider unsafe -- and several had more than 10 times hazardous levels.

U.N.: Hunger Kills 18,000 Kids Each Day

UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Some 18,000 children die every day because of hunger and malnutrition and 850 million people go to bed every night with empty stomachs, a "terrible indictment of the world in 2007," the head of the U.N. food agency said.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

Feb. 21, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Hair Pulling -- Is It Taken Too Lightly?

Hair pulling, called trichotillomania, is not widely recognized, either by the public or by mental health professionals. People with trichotillomania can't resist pulling the hair from their scalp, eyebrows, eyelashes or pubic area, which can leave noticeable bald spots.

This Week In Children's Health News

Parents Bank Kids' Umbilical Cord Blood

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Flyers in upscale doctors' offices portray it as the hot new baby-shower gift: a registry where friends and family chip in almost 2,000 dollars to start privately banking a newborn's umbilical cord blood, just in case of future illness.

How Gov't Decided Lunch Box Lead Levels

(The Associated Press) -- In 2005, when government scientists tested 60 soft, vinyl lunch boxes, they found that one in five contained amounts of lead that medical experts consider unsafe -- and several had more than 10 times hazardous levels.

U.N.: Hunger Kills 18,000 Kids Each Day

UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Some 18,000 children die every day because of hunger and malnutrition and 850 million people go to bed every night with empty stomachs, a "terrible indictment of the world in 2007," the head of the U.N. food agency said.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Share on other sites

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HMSCommentaries

Dental Health

March 7, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

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Celiac Disease -- An Overlooked Disorder

Celiac disease is a digestive disorder in which the body can't tolerate gluten, a protein found in wheat, rye, barley and sometimes oats. Treatment for celiac means eliminating gluten from your diet for life.

This Week In Children's Health News

Surgeon General: Teen Drinking a Problem

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans need a wake-up call about the widespread use of alcohol by millions of underage drinkers, acting Surgeon General Moritsugu said Tuesday.

Obesity Surgery Triples Among U.S. Teens

CHICAGO (AP) -- The number of U.S. children having obesity surgery has tripled in recent years, surging at a pace that could mean more than 1,000 such operations this year, new research suggests.

Kids May Someday Avoid Back Braces

WASHINGTON (AP) -- New technologies to straighten crooked spines while letting them grow may one day help children bypass those hated back braces.

Study: Ibuprofen Best Painkiller for Kids

CHICAGO (AP) -- Deciding which medicine to give a child in pain just got easier: The first head-to-head study of three common painkillers found that ibuprofen works best, at least for kids with broken bones, bruises and sprains.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

March 14, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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How Much of the Brain Do We Really Use?

Brain scans show that humans regularly use all of the brain, although some parts may be more active than others. So why does the myth that 90% of our brain power is unused persist?

This Week In Children's Health News

Ga. Finds Way To Fund Kids' Insurance

ATLANTA (AP) -- Gov. Sonny Perdue and Republican legislative leaders agreed Tuesday to a temporary fix that would keep a health insurance program for poor children running in spite of dwindling federal funding.

N.M. Lawmakers Approve Cancer Vaccine

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- New Mexico is on the verge of becoming the latest state to require sixth-grade girls to be vaccinated against a sexually transmitted virus that can cause cervical cancer, a spokesman for the governor said Monday.

Too Few Kids With Asthma Get Flu Shots

ATLANTA (AP) -- Children with asthma should get flu shots to protect them, but only 3 in 10 do, U.S. health officials said Thursday.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

March 21, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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The Infant Year

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When a Child Refuses To Go to School

The most difficult sign of separation anxiety may be when a child refuses to go to school. This problem is quite painful for everyone in the family.

This Week In Children's Health News

Many School Cafeterias Rarely Inspected

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Millions of children eat in school cafeterias that don't get the twice-yearly health inspections required by Congress to help prevent food poisoning.

Allergies and Asthma Don't Have to Sideline Young Athletes

(USA TODAY) -- Several decades ago, it was inconceivable that an athlete with asthma could perform competitively. But experts say there is no reason people with allergies or asthma cannot reach any level of competition they wish.

ABC's of Healthy Shopping for Teens

LAWRENCEVILLE, N.J. (AP) -- For a group of urban teen girls, lessons in nutrition began in the produce section and ended in dairy at a suburban supermarket a few miles from their school. But the give-and-take was the most energetic in the meat section.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

March 28, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

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March 28, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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COPD: It Takes Your Breath Away

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. It's also the only disease among the top 10 killers that is seeing an increase in deaths each year.

This Week In Children's Health News

Study Links Child Care to Acting Out

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Youngsters who had quality child care before kindergarten had better vocabulary scores by fifth grade, but the more time they spent in child care, the more likely their sixth grade teachers were to report problem behaviors.

Conjoined Twins to Be Separated in Ohio

DALLAS (AP) -- Doctors are planning an attempt this spring to gradually separate 3-year-old twin girls who were born connected at the head.

Mass. Girl's Overdose Raises Questions

HULL, Mass. (AP) -- In the final months of Riley's life, a school nurse said the little girl was so weak she was like a "floppy doll." The preschool principal had to help off the bus because the 4-year-old was shaking so badly. And a pharmacist complained that 's mother kept coming up with excuses for why her daughter needed more and more medication. None of their concerns was enough to save .

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

April 4, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

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Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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Update From the Medical Journals: March 2007

What's the latest news in the medical journals this month? Find out what your doctor is reading.

This Week In Children's Health News

Pregnancy Weight Gain Can Affect Kids

NEW YORK (AP) -- The standard advice for how much weight a woman should gain during pregnancy may need to change, concludes a rigorous and provocative study suggesting that even accepted weight gains may raise the risk of having an overweight toddler.

Pediatricians Urge HIV Treatment Changes

CHICAGO (AP) -- The American Academy of Pediatrics says more child-friendly HIV drugs are needed, including smaller pills and three-in-one tablets for kids, to help address a crisis affecting more than 2 million youngsters globally.

Risky Mantra for Dieting Teens: Log in, Get Thin

HOUSTON (The New York Times News Service) -- For today's generation, dieting is no longer a private affair. They count calories online, set diet goals online and share -- often harmful -- weight-loss tips online.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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April 11, 2007

Find information about hundreds of diseases, conditions and procedures.

Learn how to keep your child healthy from infancy through adolescence.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

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Does Metabolism Matter in Weight Loss?

Why is it that some people barely eat anything yet still gain weight while others can eat whatever they want and apparently never gain weight? The answers involve a mix of nature (genetic make-up) and nurture (the environment).

This Week In Children's Health News

Asthma Care to Focus More on Symptoms

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Only one in five children with asthma has the disease under good control, sobering findings that are helping to fuel a shift in care.

Child Recovering From Vaccine Infection

CHICAGO (AP) -- A 2-year-old Indiana boy who contracted a rare and life-threatening infection from his soldier father's smallpox vaccination is recovering, a hospital spokesman said.

Hospice Programs Help Parent Cope With an Infant's Death

(The New York Times News Service) -- Doctors said Brenden Yeater wouldn't survive his birth. The hours after his birth last October stretched into days, and then weeks, and doctors stopped making predictions. Brenden managed to live for five months until he died April 1.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

May 16, 2007

Do You Look for Dental Health Information Online?Take a Columbia University survey.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

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Health A To Z

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Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Depression in Children

About 5% of children and teens suffer from serious depression — and if you include those with milder symptoms, that number rises as high as 15%.

This Week In Children's Health News

Doctors Look for Early Autism Signs

CHICAGO (AP) -- Doctors and scientists are increasingly looking for early signs in babies of autism, attention deficit disorder and other mental problems that just a generation ago, scarcely anyone thought could appear in children so young.

FDA: FluMist Effective for Kids Under 5

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal regulators say MedImmune's nasal spray flu vaccine is effective for children under age 5, even though it may increase the risk of respiratory problems.

Merck Problem Means Extra Shot for Kids

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Young children needing immunization against chickenpox and three other diseases likely will have to get an extra shot, due to manufacturing problems that have halted production of a four-disease combo vaccine made by Merck and Co.

Doctors Warn on Wide Use of Cervical Cancer Vaccine

(The New York Times News Service) -- Nearly a year after a controversial cervical cancer vaccine won federal approval and hit the market to a whirlwind of interest from doctors and parents, at least two University of California-San Francisco physicians are warning against widespread use of the drug until much more extensive studies are complete.

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Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

May 16, 2007

Do You Look for Dental Health Information Online?

Take a Columbia University survey.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Depression in Children

About 5% of children and teens suffer from serious depression — and if you include those with milder symptoms, that number rises as high as 15%.

This Week In Children's Health News

Doctors Look for Early Autism Signs

CHICAGO (AP) -- Doctors and scientists are increasingly looking for early signs in babies of autism, attention deficit disorder and other mental problems that just a generation ago, scarcely anyone thought could appear in children so young.

FDA: FluMist Effective for Kids Under 5

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal regulators say MedImmune's nasal spray flu vaccine is effective for children under age 5, even though it may increase the risk of respiratory problems.

Merck Problem Means Extra Shot for Kids

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Young children needing immunization against chickenpox and three other diseases likely will have to get an extra shot, due to manufacturing problems that have halted production of a four-disease combo vaccine made by Merck and Co.

Doctors Warn on Wide Use of Cervical Cancer Vaccine

(The New York Times News Service) -- Nearly a year after a controversial cervical cancer vaccine won federal approval and hit the market to a whirlwind of interest from doctors and parents, at least two University of California-San Francisco physicians are warning against widespread use of the drug until much more extensive studies are complete.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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Dental Health

May 23, 2007

Do You Look for Dental Health Information Online?Take a Columbia University survey.

Hello, helen thompson:Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

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Health A To Z

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Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Chronic Constipation: A Strain On Health

Bowel function is not a "guy thing," but chronic constipation surely can be, particularly for older men. Many people suffer from chronic constipation due to low-fiber diets and lack of regular exercise. Here are some things you should know about a sluggish gut.

This Week In Children's Health News

N.J. Lawmakers Push Proposals on Autism

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Amid concern about New Jersey having America's highest autism rate, state senators on Monday pushed toward law proposals to promote research into autism and provide lifetime care for those with the disorder.

Epilepsy Surgery: Underused But Rising

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The research is persuasive: When drugs don't completely control epilepsy, surgery often can -- and the sooner it's tried, the better.

Study Peeks at How Normal Brains Grow

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Can you get smarter than a fifth-grader? Of course, but new research suggests some of the brain's basic building blocks for learning are nearing adult levels by age 11 or 12.

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Get Straight Talk From Your DoctorHaving trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments? Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

See what's free at AOL.com.

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Dental Health

May 23, 2007

Do You Look for Dental Health Information Online?

Take a Columbia University survey.

Hello, helen thompson:

Thank you for subscribing to our Weekly Children's Health E-Mail. Here's today's roundup of health news and features.

Children's Health

InteliHealth Resources

Drug Resource Center

Health A To Z

InteliTools

Medical Dictionary

Children's Health

Visit Our Child Guides

The Infant Year

The Early Years

The Middle Years

The Adolescent Years

Features

Chronic Constipation: A Strain On Health

Bowel function is not a "guy thing," but chronic constipation surely can be, particularly for older men. Many people suffer from chronic constipation due to low-fiber diets and lack of regular exercise. Here are some things you should know about a sluggish gut.

This Week In Children's Health News

N.J. Lawmakers Push Proposals on Autism

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- Amid concern about New Jersey having America's highest autism rate, state senators on Monday pushed toward law proposals to promote research into autism and provide lifetime care for those with the disorder.

Epilepsy Surgery: Underused But Rising

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The research is persuasive: When drugs don't completely control epilepsy, surgery often can -- and the sooner it's tried, the better.

Study Peeks at How Normal Brains Grow

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Can you get smarter than a fifth-grader? Of course, but new research suggests some of the brain's basic building blocks for learning are nearing adult levels by age 11 or 12.

Subscribe To Other Health E-Mails

Get Straight Talk From Your Doctor

Having trouble understanding your doctor? You're not alone. Doctors and patients don't do a good job communicating. What if you could ask just three questions to get the answers and understanding you need from doctors, nurses and pharmacists about your conditions, tests and treatments?

Learn more.

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Copyright Aetna InteliHealth Inc., 2007. All rights reserved. All information is intended for your general knowledge only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues and consult your physician before starting a new fitness regimen.

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